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0:05:30
The consequences: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Late_Bronze_Age_collapse
They fail to recognize the likely CAUSE there though.
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Will all civilizations fall, ultimately? Let's find out.
Our civilization, in a sense, has already fallen and is being held artificially alive with different types of bubbles. When they burst, the house of cards is going to fall down. During the end, or at the end of the Roman Empire, we saw a similar collapse of civilization. All trade in Europe stopped. Pirates took over the Mediterranean. All the institutions that the Romans had built were destroyed and sent into a Judeo-Christian darkness that lasted about 500 years.
But I'm going to talk about another fall of civilization. An earlier one. You see, the Bronze Age around the Mediterranean didn't end because "we have discovered iron, a new metal we can use". No, it stopped because the civilizations around the Mediterranean ran out of tin.[1]All of a sudden, no more tin. And the result of this was that all the civilizations around the Mediterranean collapsed. They couldn't make the tools they used to make anymore. Society didn't work anymore. They didn't have tin to make bronze. So we saw famine, war, civil war, chaos. For 300 years, all the civilizations collapsed. And then, of course, after 300 years of chaos, new civilizations appeared. With iron, they found an alternative. Our civilization, it's a lot more vulnerable. We are many more than they were. The chaos, the suffering, it's going to be a thousand times worse. And the consequences might be a thousand times worse because we have nuclear power plants. I'm not worried about nuclear weapons.[2]Somebody nukes you. Six years later there's a big town there, right? Hiroshima wasn't wiped out. Nagasaki wasn't wiped out.
Having certain descendants of certain slaves move into your town in Detroit is actually a lot worse than having your town nuked.


But nuclear power plants, they are a problem. And all this waste from them, all the problem from them is going to end up in our sea. And human beings, we have almost always lived along the coast.[3]In the forest, here in Europe, along the coast. And the sea has fed us, made us survive easier. And that's probably not going to happen in the future for a few tens of thousands of years because of radioactive waste, because of pollution, because of all the hormones women put into their bodies so that they can sleep around. Because of all the shit that button civilization produced.
So, 300 years of chaos. 500 years after the Roman Empire, I guess you could say. At least 5,000 the next time before new civilizations will start to appear again, I guess.[4]That was it, really. Some encouraging words. And like I said in the beginning, our civilization in a sense has already fallen. We just haven't realized yet because somebody is keeping reality from us. But reality is going to catch up with us and put us back in place. Thanks for watching.
"No! No! No! Don't look out the window! Don't pull back the curtain. Everything is fine outside! We are moving forward at great speed! Trust us!"
Our civilization, in a sense, has already fallen and is being held artificially alive with different types of bubbles. When they burst, the house of cards is going to fall down. During the end, or at the end of the Roman Empire, we saw a similar collapse of civilization. All trade in Europe stopped. Pirates took over the Mediterranean. All the institutions that the Romans had built were destroyed and sent into a Judeo-Christian darkness that lasted about 500 years.
But I'm going to talk about another fall of civilization. An earlier one. You see, the Bronze Age around the Mediterranean didn't end because "we have discovered iron, a new metal we can use". No, it stopped because the civilizations around the Mediterranean ran out of tin.[1]All of a sudden, no more tin. And the result of this was that all the civilizations around the Mediterranean collapsed. They couldn't make the tools they used to make anymore. Society didn't work anymore. They didn't have tin to make bronze. So we saw famine, war, civil war, chaos. For 300 years, all the civilizations collapsed. And then, of course, after 300 years of chaos, new civilizations appeared. With iron, they found an alternative. Our civilization, it's a lot more vulnerable. We are many more than they were. The chaos, the suffering, it's going to be a thousand times worse. And the consequences might be a thousand times worse because we have nuclear power plants. I'm not worried about nuclear weapons.[2]Somebody nukes you. Six years later there's a big town there, right? Hiroshima wasn't wiped out. Nagasaki wasn't wiped out.
Having certain descendants of certain slaves move into your town in Detroit is actually a lot worse than having your town nuked.

Moral of the story. It's easier to come back from a nuclear bomb than 5 decades of big government policies.

But nobody would use such knowledge to hurt Europe, would the? Nooo!
But nuclear power plants, they are a problem. And all this waste from them, all the problem from them is going to end up in our sea. And human beings, we have almost always lived along the coast.[3]In the forest, here in Europe, along the coast. And the sea has fed us, made us survive easier. And that's probably not going to happen in the future for a few tens of thousands of years because of radioactive waste, because of pollution, because of all the hormones women put into their bodies so that they can sleep around. Because of all the shit that button civilization produced.
So, 300 years of chaos. 500 years after the Roman Empire, I guess you could say. At least 5,000 the next time before new civilizations will start to appear again, I guess.[4]That was it, really. Some encouraging words. And like I said in the beginning, our civilization in a sense has already fallen. We just haven't realized yet because somebody is keeping reality from us. But reality is going to catch up with us and put us back in place. Thanks for watching.
"No! No! No! Don't look out the window! Don't pull back the curtain. Everything is fine outside! We are moving forward at great speed! Trust us!"
- I guess the survivalists of that time used it all up to make tinfoilhats?
- People living in cities are probably more worried about nukes than I am.
- Except in times of trouble, when the smart ones move to hillforts.
- Maybe the 400,000 years of Stone Age came as a result of the last high tech civilization?